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Jang Joonggun
thrive off of sth (grammar)
- People thrive off of other people's failures
'off of' can be replaced with 'from', right?
- I didn't read anything off of him.
This is another example of 'off of'.
1. Can I take 'off of' as 'from?
2. Is 'off of' a preposition? or 'off' is an adverb and 'of' is a preposition?
Mar 18, 2016 4:51 AM
Answers · 2
People thrive off of other people's failures = People thrive off other people's failures.
Off of = off >>"Of " is not necessary and redundant . They mean the same .
Take out the word "of" ,and the same meaning in every sentence will still be there.
March 18, 2016
Hi! They are two prepositions. Because this is used many times in conversational English, to replace "off of" with "from" would sound very foreign. Here are a few more examples of using "off of":
He jumped off of the pier
The leaves fell of of the tree
He knocked the top off of it
I profited off of his purchases
One thing I will say is that "People thrive off of other people's failures" can also make sense with out "of," which is why some people will say that this is bad English grammar. "People thrive off other people's failures."
Thanks!
March 18, 2016
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Jang Joonggun
Language Skills
English, Korean
Learning Language
English
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